4.7 Article

Effects of Thermal Aging on Molar Mass of Ultra-High Molar Mass Polyethylene Fibers

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14071324

Keywords

ultra-high molar mass polyethylene (UHMMPE); high strength fiber; molar mass; thermal aging

Funding

  1. NIST [70NANB18H163]
  2. [70NANB18H049]
  3. [70NANB20H007]

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This study investigates the chemical degradation and physical changes of thermally aged UHMMPE fibers, aiming to improve the lightweight and soft UHMMPE inserts used in ballistic-resistant body armor. The results demonstrate a decrease in the molar mass of the fibers and changes in their crystalline morphology, which negatively affect their performance.
Ultra-high molar mass polyethylene (UHMMPE) is commonly used for ballistic-resistant body armor applications due to the superior strength of the fibers fabricated from this material combined with its low density. However, polymeric materials are susceptible to thermally induced degradation during storage and use, which can reduce the high strength of these fibers, and, thus, negatively impact their ballistic resistance. The objective of this work is to advance the field of lightweight and soft UHMMPE inserts used in various types of ballistic resistant-body armor via elucidating the mechanisms of chemical degradation and evaluating this chemical degradation, as well as the corresponding physical changes, of the UHMMPE fibers upon thermal aging. This is the first comprehensive study on thermally aged UHMMPE fibers that measures their decrease in the average molar mass via high-temperature size exclusion chromatography (HT-SEC) analysis. The decrease in the molar mass was further supported by the presence of carbon-centered free radicals in the polyethylene that was detected using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. These carbon-centered radicals result from a cascade of thermo-oxidative reactions that ultimately induce C-C ruptures along the backbone of the polymer. Changes in the crystalline morphology of the UHMMPE fibers were also observed through wide-angle X-ray diffraction (WAXS), showing an increase in the amorphous regions, which promotes oxygen diffusion into the material, specifically through these areas. This increase in the amorphous fraction of the highly oriented polyethylene fibers has a synergistic effect with the thermo-oxidative degradation processes and contributes significantly to the decrease in their molar mass.

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